Laozi's principle that returning to the source and taking backward steps often opens forward movement trapped by procrastination.
The Tao Te Ching states that returning is the motion of the Tao, and that going backward is the way forward. Applied to procrastination, this suggests that progress sometimes requires stepping back rather than pushing ahead. When stuck, you might return to fundamentals: Why does this matter? What's the simplest version? What am I truly resisting? Taking these backward steps—to origin, to essence, to core motivation—often dissolves obstacles that forward pushing only compounds. Practically, this might mean returning to first principles before restarting, or stepping back to examine what you're actually avoiding rather than attacking the task directly. This reversal breaks the procrastination cycle where increased effort increases resistance. By moving backward into clarity and authenticity, you create a stable foundation from which genuine forward motion becomes possible and effortless.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
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